• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

9 PDF

Thanks MGagen. Everyone seems to be looking for one thing to get the monitor overhead to agree with TOS stills when it is a collective of a bunch of little things to yield that necessary space and to get it to match.

1. shifting the inner face of the inner bridge ring from 9ft 4 inches to 9 ft 3 inches. ( again in adhering to the 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18 inch breaks I’ve noticed macro level of everything from TOS stills and Stage 9 floor plans from Journey To Babel. IE bed frame height in captain’s cabin needing to be 18 inches to match height of back of knee while sitting on bed, 3 inch rail depth on the ladder between the engineering consoles, height of transporter deck to match the back of the knee at 18 inches and not 24, adjusting everything to the nearest 3 inch breaks when measuring as a few offhand examples. )

2. Subtracting 1/2 degree from each half console.
3. Raising the ceiling from 7 ft 2 inches to 7 ft 3 inches.
4. Shallowing the angle of the back plate of the upper moniter face and frame.
5. Changing the monitor frame face depth from 2 inches to 3 inches.
6. Taller dome. ( x 2 )

Clearing front yard of tree pruning pretty much done. ( if neighbor’s kid will finish hauling it off before I get hit with a fine. ) My friend came over yesterday and assisted in dismantling the bridge station so I can get the remaining measurement across the face of the monitor overhead. I’m 2 days behind on what I planned on. I’ll resume working on the drawings tonight. ( last night I needed a break )
 
Last edited:
Release 1.5.3 Continued
I'll try to do a larger revised cleanup of the dome profile page soon.
xyhdaO2.jpg
 
Last edited:
The 3 inch pattern makes so much sense. At scale that is 1/4 of a foot. A very easy division to mark out. On my Constitution plans, I went with a 3" pixel or 4 pixels per foot.
 
Hello Robert,
I know this may be considered a „necro-post“, but I have been so fascinated by your amazing work on these set plans. I just wanted to let you know, that if you want I can redraw all your drawings in CAD for you and send you the pdf, dwg or whichever format you want.
I do CAD drawings all day at work, but it would be a most welcome change for me and maybe this could help you in continuing your amazing project! Please let me know if I may help you.
Kind Regards!

Roman
Long time lurker, made this account just to offer you my help.
 
Greetings TheRoman89,
Thank you for your offer. At this point I’m not sure what to do.
The full size science station has been thrown out.
The study models have long been thrown away.
I’ve kept all my reference in case I want to do more drawings to post here.
Lately I’ve been mulling over doing that for the bridge and full assembled orthos of the full bridge.
As well doing updated photos with color specs.
I haven’t cause I felt there really wasn’t much interest.
You are welcome to do as you suggest. My preferred file format is .pdf. ( hence the name ) I wanted that format since it contains many images and is readable on Adobe Acrobat which most people with a PC can read.
I’ll have to do a review here to see where I can pick up here.
Thank you for your support.

Robert Simmons
Vice Rear Admiral Nerd
 
Hello Robert,
Thanks for your reply! I can‘t speak for the rest of the fandom, but my interest in such detailed set plans has been there since I was a little kid watching reruns of TOS on TV and so far it hasn‘t really gone away, except for a short peer pressured teenage phase…
Next week I‘ll have some free time and I‘ll do a proof of concept for a few of your drawings.

Your amazing progress and your altruism in this project still inspires me.

All the best!

Roman
 
I’ll try to post some stuff particularly the helm profile and some updated color reference sheets.

As a side request if this is being done in CAD could you assemble everything I’ve currently released as a full 3D model of the bridge. I would appreciate it seeing everything in its proper place. Some views from different vantage points around the bridge. Use the McMaster command module as a placeholder until revisions are posted. It would mean a lot to me.

Robert Simmons
Who?
 
I haven’t cause I felt there really wasn’t much interest.
If you will indulge a recent interloper, please allow me to dispel that idea. I only just found your thread very recently, and I can say that my interest is off the charts. I have been reading and re-reading these pages trying to educate myself, as I am working on a physical model of the stage 9 set (inspired by Matt Jefferies' model, but about three times the scale of his and built mostly from wood). It's a ridiculous endeavor at my age, but this is the first time in my life that I have had the working space and some of the tools to even attempt something like this.

I am blown away by your thread, in both its meticulous attention to detail and your repeated insistence that this information is for the benefit of the whole fandom at no cost. It's remarkable.

When I saw yesterday that your last post had been over two years ago, I was worried that maybe you had experienced an unfortunate turn of events. So seeing your updates today made me very happy. Of course I would have a selfish motive in that your years of research and effort are helping me, but more than that you are a selfless contributor and, in my estimation, a "national treasure" for any TOS fan who has interest in these set details. If anyone here deserves the LLAP, you certainly do.

Now, on a more practical note, I'm wondering if I can maybe help a little. I'm not using traditional CAD per se, but I am doing a lot of my initial work in Sketchup. It's all in the wrong scale and wrong units (mm) for your project, but maybe I can try to make some "parallel" 3D models for you of your own geometries, that would be in 1:1 feet & inches. I understand 100% how nice it is to see one's own work rendered in 3D with the pieces fitting together.

I might need to kind of start over on all my metrics anyway, because the more I have read through your thread, the more I have started to feel like I took the wrong approach in building all my stuff right on top of a scaled copy of the Babel plan. Over the decades, I think many of us fans have collectively made quite a few assumptions and assertions about the available materials that turn out to be not true. (In particular, I agree with Robert Comsol when he refers to "major issues regarding the TOS set recreation for the DS9 episode." I absolutely love that episode, and am grateful to everyone who made it possible, but the T&T turbolift, for example, is just a mess of weak approximations from start to finish.) And I've learned from your amazing thread that not everything on my Babel plan actually agrees with the as-filmed episode, either.

Anyway, we can both ponder this. If you'd like to see some of your work in a format that looks something like the following — maybe at your scale, maybe at mine? — I can think about trying to carve out some time for this. I guess I should point out that the purpose of my 3D models is not photorealism, but rather verifying that all the geometries fit together and look authentic to the eye. Much like your goals for your paper models, I'll wager.

Here's a (somewhat obsolete now) WIP snapshot, just to give you an idea of how my models look. (FWIW, the attachment system for the wall panels is obsolete, as I have decided just this week to use a completely different approach.)
Joo3e0A.png

In any case, if I were to model your geometries a lot of the fine details would be different from mine, as I would not be limited to the thicknesses of the materials I am using for my scale model. (For example, standardizing on 5mm plywood requires certain compromises in wall thicknesses.) And fair warning, I have multiple RL responsibilities and limited time to devote to this project, so I am profoundly slow.

But yeah, this is a great way to view things from never-before-seen angles.
d83bIBs.jpeg
 
Last edited:
I’ll try to post some stuff particularly the helm profile and some updated color reference sheets.

As a side request if this is being done in CAD could you assemble everything I’ve currently released as a full 3D model of the bridge. I would appreciate it seeing everything in its proper place. Some views from different vantage points around the bridge. Use the McMaster command module as a placeholder until revisions are posted. It would mean a lot to me.

Robert Simmons
Who?
I work as an architect and the programm I use is great for building 3D models of ugly white concrete blocks and generating 2D drawings from that. I never tried to build anything as complex as the Bridge as most architecture is based on 90 degree angles 😅
Anyway, I‘ll start with 2D drawings. Like JustaBill my goal is a physical model in the future.
But SketchUp is such a fun software! I loved using it in the past! I also love seeing your progress. Maybe this can become a team effort? A man who has such ambition deserves dome help!
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top